Thesis.Writing.2013 - Student Learning Development

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Transcript Thesis.Writing.2013 - Student Learning Development

The Thesis Writing Process
Maeve Gallagher
Student Learning Development
Student Counselling Service
Trinity College Dublin
Learning Objectives
• Focus on writing process
• Explore strategies for starting and
maintaining writing
• Identify self-management strategies to aid
process
• Consider structure and outlining of thesis
• Share strategies and experiences
Murray’s Model (2002)
Social
 Interactions, discussion
 Support
Psychological
 Motivation, goal setting, self-monitoring
Rhetorical = Writing
 Regular writing
 “Snack” writing + “binge” writing
How to write a lot (Silvia 2007)
Barriers:
“I can’t find time to write”
“I need to do some more analyses first” aka
“I need to read a few more articles”
“To write a lot I need a new computer...”
“I’m waiting until I feel like it”
Self-management & Planning
• Desires & Wants v.s Goals & Tasks
• SMART goals
SMART Goal Setting
• S = Specific
• M = Measurable
• A = Action
• R = Realistic
• T = Time-based
Self-management & Planning
• Desires & Wants v.s Goals & Tasks
• SMART goals
• Planning tools
– Timeline
– Weekly
Possible Timeline
Submit - 27 January 2011
Proposed draft deadlines:
Draft 1
Ch. 1 - Introduction
Ch. 2 - Literature Review
Ch. 3 - Methods
Ch. 4 - Findings Interviews
Ch. 5 - Findings Document/Inventory
Ch. 6 - Discussion
Ch. 7 - Conclusion
Abstract
Draft 2
Final Revision
Overview – Gannt chart
Months
Topic
Agreed
Aims &
Objectives
Opening
Sections
Draft
Outline
Literature
Review
Method/
Approach
Analysis/
Results
Discussion/
Conclusions
References
Acknowledge
Binding
Submission
to Tutor
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2
3
4
5
6
7
Self-management & Planning
• Desires & Wants v.s Goals & Tasks
• SMART goals
• Planning tools
– Timeline
– Weekly
• Deadlines
• Writing routine
Writing Strategies
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Notebook/journal
Write to prompts
Freewriting
Generative writing
Writing Sandwich
Writing to prompts
• What writing have I done and what would I
like to do?
• Where do my ideas come from?
• How does what I read compare with my
own views?
• What I want to write about next is…
• What do I want to write about next?
Freewriting
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Writing for 5 minutes
Without stopping
In sentences
Private – no external reader
No structure needed
Topic related to your research
Like brainstorming in sentences
Generative writing
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Writing for 5 minutes
Without stopping
In sentences
Focusing on one topic (maybe from your
freewriting
• To be read by someone else
Writing Sandwich
• Writing – 10 minutes
• Talking – 10 minutes
• Writing – 10 minutes
The Single System (2010)
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Interactive reading
Interactive note taking
Citeable notes
Focus statement
One-page outline
Long outline with references
Regular writing routine
Dissertation!
Interactive reading & note taking
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Collect notes not articles or books
How do you make notes?
Make use of bibliographic programme
“…your thoughts about others’ work”
(Single 2010, p. 79)
What to make notes on
– Big Picture
– Big Point
– Premise or Hypothesis
– Data, sources, arguments
– Theories or conceptual
– Analytical or research methods
– Results or analysis
– Quotations
– How it influences your research
Structure & Outlining
• Mapping
• Focus statement
• One page outline
– Generic thesis structure
– Use table of contents feature
• Allocate word count for each section
• Design sub-sections
• Write in layers
Citeable notes
“Citeable notes come from your interactive
notes…they provide small building blocks
that you can use to analyze and
categorize the literature in your field”
Example:
(Single, 2009) Book emphasizes the role of
prewriting in academic writing
Grouping Citeable Notes
Single, 2010, p. 83
List of Citeable Notes
Citeable Notes
Grouped Thematically
Author #1 (2009)
- Citeable note #1
- Citeable note #2
- Citeable note #3
Theme 1
(Author #1): Citeable Note #2
(Author #3): Citeable Note #3
Author #2 (2007)
- Citeable note #1
- Citeable note #2
Theme 2
(Author #1): Citeable Note #1
(Author #1): Citeable Note #3
(Author #3): Citeable Note #2
Author #3 (2005)
- Citeable note #1
- Citeable note #2
- Citeable note #3
Theme 3
(Author #2): Citeable Note #1
(Author #2): Citeable Note #2
Writing in layers
• Write a list of chapter headings
• Write a sentence or two on contents of each
chapter
• Write lists of headings for each section in each
chapter
• Make notes for each heading on how you will
develop the section
• Write an introductory paragraph for each chapter
• Write the word count, draft number and date at
top of first page
Revision
• At organisational level
– Based on table of contents
– Chapters and sections
• At content level
– Preview, smooth, review
– Section by section
• Targeted revision
– Grammatical errors
– Idiosyncrasies
Overcoming blocks?
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Freewriting & Generative writing
Mind-mapping
Verbalise
Avoid perfectionism
Writing buddy
Seek support
Visualise completed thesis
Combine strategies
Tips for successful writing
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Plan to write regularly
Make a time plan and stick to it
Write up section as soon as it’s ready
Stop writing at a point where you could go on –
makes it easier to start next time!
• Decide where and when best for you
• Don’t write when exhausted
• Seek support